Words from Our Happy Customers
| What Your Dollar is Really Worth in Panama and China |
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| Written by Panama Real Estate |
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Today's comment is by Chuck Dolce, senior writer for The Sovereign Society, former broker and member of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange for nearly 17 years, where he specialized in stock index and short-term interest rate futures. He's been on location in Panama, reporting from our 2008 Total Wealth Symposium. It's Saturday in Panama and the last day of the Sovereign Society's Total Wealth Symposium. Markets are closed and other than some weekend oil posturing, there's not too much in the news. So while most of the conference has been focused on making and protecting money - I haven't said much about the country of Panama itself. So if you'll indulge me... Panama is truly spectacular. If you've never been, it's a country on the move. Skyscrapers rise up from what was once a depressed Central American country. Skyscrapers are built IN the ocean. Architecturally, the juxtaposition of the new and the old creates almost a surreal effect. It's 2008 on one side and 1940 on the other. |
Panama Real Estate News
| Real Estate Is Going South, In This Case Straight To Panama |
Real Estate Is Going South — In This Case Straight To Panama
By MARILYN ALVA
A Florida developer is making hay while the Sunshine State wilts in cloudy weather. Todd Gates has headed from Naples, Fla., to Panama, where real estate market conditions are presently much sunnier. This sliver of a nation south of Costa Rica links Central America to South America. It has coastlines on the Atlantic and Pacific and lush mountains in between. Here, Gates has found his idyll: a revenue base not tied to boom-and-bust Florida. Panama is where he's now developing resorts, commercial buildings and residential areas worth $25 million to $500 million each. "I spent two years visiting every Caribbean island and Central American country," Gates said. "Panama had exactly what I was looking for." Gates liked that the service-based economy, growing nearly 9% a year, wasn't tourism-centric but diversified with banking, commerce and shipping. Panama is home to the world's second biggest free-trade zone. The $5.2 billion expansion of the Panama Canal should help keep the economy pumping. |
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